As treaties and trade agreements are implemented this year, more U.S. companies are looking at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations for fresh business opportunities. Fortunately, a whole host of logistics and transportation service providers are laying the groundwork to overcome inherent infrastructure challenges.

Today, U.S. trucking companies face more regulations than any time in history—and they claim this “regulatory tsunami” is putting the clamp on U.S. productivity. During this session shippers will gain a better understanding of the current state of trucking regulations (HOS & CSA) and the impact they're having on capacity and rates.

As a supply chain professional you need to have complete visibility of your complex supply chain operations to maintain control and alignment with the business strategy of your company. Without a centralized, current view that presents actionable information about processes, the movement of goods, and warehouse and distribution operations, it is next to impossible to make smart decisions and introduce the right changes to optimize the supply chain network you’re in.

Without granular as well as high-level visibility, it is also difficult to enable people and processes in the supply chain to support customer service-level commitments and prepare for tomorrow’s operational challenges.

Columbus has gathered these 3 customer case studies to highlight how supply chain professionals can have complete visibility of complex supply chain operations to maintain control and alignment with the business strategy of your company.

Read these Real World Customer Scenarios to see how supply chain professionals are addressing these issues through:

Aligning Supply Chain Processes with Business Strategy

Allocating Resources

Effective Planning and Decision-Making

Subscribe to Logistics Management magazine

Subscribe today. It's FREE!

Get timely insider information that you can use to better manage yourentire logistics operation.

Recent Entries

The Department of Transportation’s Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) reported this week that U.S. trade with its North America Free Trade Agreement partners Canada and Mexico in January dropped 1.2 percent to $89.3 billion.

In today's supply chain, the only constant is change.
Our white paper 'Change Your Perspective: Four Keys to Effectively Adapting to Rapid Change in the Distribution Center Environment' provides key insights on not only adapting to trends, but which trends will enable you to achieve running the warehouse of the future.